Thursday, December 29, 2011

Do I dareDisturb the universe?In a minute there is timeFor decisions and revisionswhich a minute will reverse--The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,T.S. Eliot

I thought when I was a young manThat I would conquer the world with truth.I thought I would lead an Army greater than Alexander ever dreamed of, not to conquer nations but to liberate mankind. With truth. With the golden sound of the word.But only a few of then heard.Only a few of you understood--How Green was My Valley (1941)

We are turning into a nationof whimpering slaves to Fear—fear of war, fear of poverty, fear of random terrorism,fear of getting down-sizedor fired because of the plunging economy,fear of getting evicted for bad debtsor suddenly getting locked up in a military detention campon vague charges of being a terrorist sympathizer--Hunter Thompson___________________

Do we think beyond the buzz words and the emotional, feel-good rhetoric of false logic and weak-kneed patriotism? These are further thoughts on the bogus military mission of "goodwill".

It is as if we are trapped in the lyrics of a cheap country western song espousing uber-patriotic themes. We may be able to wrap ourselves in the flag and award magnificent medals for the expenditure of lives, but this does not justify the tableau.

Where in the Principles of War is that of Goodwill? Doesn't a forced U.S. entry into an Afghan valley simply reinforce their militancy and further disconnect them from our goals and the ephemeral hold of their make-believe government? This not about us, and their definition of Goodwill might sound a lot like the statement, "Stay our of my valley!"

The question seems, "How does one dare disturb this universe created by a warrior mentality (ours) that bumps head-on with another entrenched warrior society (theirs)?" It is clear that we can back off, but they have too much skin in the game to do so.

A clean, sterile award ceremony in the White House cannot relieve the stench of death surrounding our leaders. This stench belongs to them, and not men like Medal of Honor recipients Meyer, Miller or Murphy.